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JOURNAL of MENTAL. SCIENCE, JULY, 1928. Born 1843. Died
JOURNAL OF MENTAL. SCIENCE, JULY, 1928. :@ SIR DAvID FERRIER, F.R.S. Born 1843. Honorary Member Died March 19, 1928. since 1895. THE JOURNAL OF MENTAL SCIENCE [Published by Authority of the Royal Medico-Psychological A ssociation.] N@3o6[@@] JULY, 1928. VOL LXXIV. SIR DAVID FERRIER, LL.D., Sc.D., M.D., F.R.C.P., F.R.S. 1843—1928. B@ the death of Sir David Ferrier, which occurred in the early part of this year, we have lost the last survivor of that galaxy of great men who founded the British School of Neurology, and made the name of the National Hospital, Queen Square, famous through out the world. Ferrier was born at Woodside, near Aberdeen, in 1843, and died on March 19, 1928, at York House, Kensington, in his 86th year. He was educated at the Grammar School of Aberdeen, and while at school gained, in open competition from the whole of Scotland, a bursary which enabled him to enter the University of Aberdeen in 1859. After a brilliant career as a student he graduated as Master of Arts in 1863 with first-class honours in the humanities and philosophy, and further distinguished himself by winning the Ferguson Scholarship—a prize open to graduates of all four Scottish Universities. During his University career at Aberdeen Ferrier came in contact with Alexander Bain, the Professor of Logic, and largely through his influence became interested in the study of psychology, and thus it was that in 1864 Ferrier went to Heidelberg to pursue his studies in this subject. During his stay at Heidelberg he decided to devote himself to medicine and returning to Scotland in 1865 commenced his medical studies at the University of Edinburgh, where he graduated in i868. -
The Neurological Founding Fathers of the National Society for Epilepsy and of the Chalfont Centre for Epilepsy
3'ournal ofNeurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 1993;56:599-604 599 REVIEW J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry: first published as 10.1136/jnnp.56.6.599 on 1 June 1993. Downloaded from The neurological founding fathers of the National Society for Epilepsy and of the Chalfont Centre for Epilepsy J W A S Sander, J Barclay, S D Shorvon Abstract agricultural colony where people with epilepsy The National Society for Epilepsy is the could live and work, hence the origin of the largest epilepsy charity in the United Chalfont Centre. The roads and houses at the Kingdom, and administers the Chalfont Chalfont Centre for Epilepsy are named after Centre for Epilepsy. The Society was several British philanthropists from the late founded in London in 1892 and its first 1800s, who were generally perceived as the task was to establish an agricultural Society's founding fathers. Our researches of colony where people with epilepsy could the early history of the Society show, how- live and work; and this was the origin of ever, that neurologists from the National the Chalfont Centre. Recently, details of Hospital, Queen Square, were instrumental in the early history ofthe Society have come its foundation and early running; indeed, it to light showing that neurologists from was their impetus which interested others in the National Hospital, Queen Square setting up the Society. After several years, were instrumental in its foundation. The however, differing opinions on whether meeting in which the society was consti- epilepsy should be viewed as a medical condi- tuted was held in the house of Thomas tion or a social problem led to the premature Buzzard, chaired by David Ferrier, and rupture of the relations between the neurolo- its first resolution was proposed by John gists and lay persons on the executive com- Hughlings-Jackson. -
Sir Charles Sherrington'sthe Integrative Action of the Nervous System: a Centenary Appreciation
doi:10.1093/brain/awm022 Brain (2007), 130, 887^894 OCCASIONAL PAPER Sir Charles Sherrington’sThe integrative action of the nervous system: a centenary appreciation Robert E. Burke Formerly Chief of the Laboratory of Neural Control, National Institute of Neurological Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA Present address: P.O. Box 1722, El Prado, NM 87529,USA E-mail: [email protected] In 1906 Sir Charles Sherrington published The Integrative Action of the Nervous System, which was a collection of ten lectures delivered two years before at Yale University in the United States. In this monograph Sherrington summarized two decades of painstaking experimental observations and his incisive interpretation of them. It settled the then-current debate between the ‘‘Reticular Theory’’ versus ‘‘Neuron Doctrine’’ ideas about the fundamental nature of the nervous system in mammals in favor of the latter, and it changed forever the way in which subsequent generations have viewed the organization of the central nervous system. Sherrington’s magnum opus contains basic concepts and even terminology that are now second nature to every student of the subject. This brief article reviews the historical context in which the book was written, summarizes its content, and considers its impact on Neurology and Neuroscience. Keywords: Neuron Doctrine; spinal reflexes; reflex coordination; control of movement; nervous system organization Introduction The first decade of the 20th century saw two momentous The Silliman lectures events for science. The year 1905 was Albert Einstein’s Sherrington’s 1906 monograph, published simultaneously in ‘miraculous year’ during which three of his most celebrated London, New Haven and New York, was based on a series papers in theoretical physics appeared. -
An Introduction to Late British Associationism and Its Context This Is a Story About Philosophy. Or About Science
Chapter 1: An Introduction to Late British Associationism and Its Context This is a story about philosophy. Or about science. Or about philosophy transforming into science. Or about science and philosophy, and how they are related. Or were, in a particular time and place. At least, that is the general area that the following narrative will explore, I hope with sufficient subtlety. The matter is rendered non-transparent by the fact that that the conclusions one draws with regard to such questions are, in part, matters of discretionary perspective – as I will try to demonstrate. My specific historical focus will be on the propagation of a complex intellectual tradition concerned with human sensation, perception, and mental function in early nineteenth century Britain. Not only philosophical opinion, but all aspects of British intellectual – and practical – life, were in the process of significant transformation during this time. This cultural flux further confuses recovery of the situated significance of the intellectual tradition I am investigating. The study of the mind not only was influenced by a set of broad social shifts, but it also participated in them fully as both stimulus to and recipient of changing conditions. One indication of this is simply the variety of terms used to identify the ‘philosophy of mind’ as an intellectual enterprise in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.1 But the issue goes far deeper into the fluid constitutive features of the enterprise - including associated conceptual systems, methods, intentions of practitioners, and institutional affiliations. In order to understand philosophy of mind in its time, we must put all these factors into play. -
History-Of-Movement-Disorders.Pdf
Comp. by: NJayamalathiProof0000876237 Date:20/11/08 Time:10:08:14 Stage:First Proof File Path://spiina1001z/Womat/Production/PRODENV/0000000001/0000011393/0000000016/ 0000876237.3D Proof by: QC by: ProjectAcronym:BS:FINGER Volume:02133 Handbook of Clinical Neurology, Vol. 95 (3rd series) History of Neurology S. Finger, F. Boller, K.L. Tyler, Editors # 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved Chapter 33 The history of movement disorders DOUGLAS J. LANSKA* Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Tomah, WI, USA, and University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI, USA THE BASAL GANGLIA AND DISORDERS Eduard Hitzig (1838–1907) on the cerebral cortex of dogs OF MOVEMENT (Fritsch and Hitzig, 1870/1960), British physiologist Distinction between cortex, white matter, David Ferrier’s (1843–1928) stimulation and ablation and subcortical nuclei experiments on rabbits, cats, dogs and primates begun in 1873 (Ferrier, 1876), and Jackson’s careful clinical The distinction between cortex, white matter, and sub- and clinical-pathologic studies in people (late 1860s cortical nuclei was appreciated by Andreas Vesalius and early 1870s) that the role of the motor cortex was (1514–1564) and Francisco Piccolomini (1520–1604) in appreciated, so that by 1876 Jackson could consider the the 16th century (Vesalius, 1542; Piccolomini, 1630; “motor centers in Hitzig and Ferrier’s region ...higher Goetz et al., 2001a), and a century later British physician in degree of evolution that the corpus striatum” Thomas Willis (1621–1675) implicated the corpus -
Mind, Brain, and Adaptation: the Localization of Cerebral
brain & behavior 5. Mind, Brain, and Adaptation: the Localization of Cerebral complex systems Function biology As the 19th century progressed, the problem of the relationship of mind to brain science education became especially acute as physiologists and psychologists began to focus on the nature and localization of cerebral function. In a diffuse and general way, the idea of science & culture functional localization had been available since antiquity. A notion of "soul" globally guest exhibitions related to the brain, for example, can be found in the work of Pythagoras, Hippocrates, Plato, Erisistratus, and Galen, among others. The pneumatic physiologists of the middle ages thought that mental capacities were located in the fluid of the ventricles. As belief in animal spirits died, however, so too did the ventricular hypothesis; and by 1784, when Jiri Prochaska published his De functionibus systematis nervosi, interest had shifted to the brain stem and cerebrum. Despite these early views, the doctrine of functional localization proper -- the notion that specific mental processes are correlated with discrete regions of the brain -- and the attempt to establish localization by means of empirical observation were essentially 19th century achievements. The first critical steps toward those ends can be traced to the work of Franz Josef Gall (1758- 1828). Gall [see figure 13] was born in Baden and studied medicine at Strasbourg and Vienna, where he received his degree in 1785. Impressed as a child by apparent correlations between unusual talents in his friends and striking variations in facial or cranial appearance, Gall set out to evolve a new cranioscopic method of localizing mental faculties. -
Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (1857–1952)
GENERAL ARTICLE Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (1857–1952) Prasanna Venkhatesh V Twentieth century bore witness to remarkable scientists who have advanced our understanding of the brain. Among them, Sir Charles Scott Sherrington’s ideas about the way in which the central nervous system operates has continuing relevance even today. He received honorary doctorates from twenty- two universities and was honoured with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in the year 1932 along with Lord Prasanna Venkhatesh V is Edgar Adrian for their work on the functions of neurons. He currently a graduate developed our modern notion of the reflex as a model for how student at the Center for the periphery and spinal cord connect sensation and action. Neuroscience working with Prof. Aditya Murthy. He is “...To move things is all that mankind can do, for such the sole working on voluntary control of reaching and executant is muscle, whether in whispering a syllable or in felling pointing movements. His aforest.” research interests are –Sherrington neural basis of motor control and animal Sherrington had the genius to see the real need to amalgamate the behavior. scattered ideas in neurophysiology at that time, to give a compre- hensive overview that changed our perception of brain functions. In a career spanning almost sixty-five years, he published more than three hundred and twenty articles and a couple of noteworthy books. He was a man of admirable qualities and greatness, which is evident from the enviable number of articles, commentaries and books that have been written about his life, his approach to science and the world in general. -
Sir Charles Sherrington, Om
TWENTIEH CENTURY NEUROLOGY The British Contribution © 2001 by Imperial College Press Chapter 1 SIR CHARLES SHERRINGTON, O. M., P. R. S. (1857–1952) W. C. Gibson In a life extending over ninety-five years, Sherrington (Fig. 1) was a major influence in the development of the neurological sciences in many countries, though mainly in Britain. Fig. 1. Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (portrait by R.S. Eves, 1997). 1 2 W. C. Gibson Even before he received his medical degree from Cambridge, he was drawn into the fierce neurological debate concerning Professor Goltz’s demonstration, to the International Medical Congress in London in 1881, of the performance of a dog in which he had removed part of its brain. In true British fashion a committee was set up, under J.N. Langley the Cambridge physiologist. His student, Sherrington, reported on the precise anatomical structures involved, thus launching his career in the realm of scientific publications, a career in which he produced 320 papers. At the same boisterous meeting David Ferrier demonstrated the con- tralateral effect, on a monkey, of removing part of its brain. (Ferrier was Sherrington’s hero, to whom 20 years later he dedicated his Integrative Action of the Nervous System). Thus began in 1881 Sherrington’s interest in cerebral localisation of function. A growing interest in pathology next took Sherrington to study with Rudolf Virchow in Berlin. There he had the additional education of seeing Virchow's enemy Bismarck berating the Reichstag (Virchow believed that the ruling family of Prussia consisted of the father who had softening of the brain, the grandfather had hardening of the brain, and the grandson who had no brain at all!) On returning to London, Sherrington was made a lecturer in physiology at St. -
Toward an Ethnography of Experimental Psychology Emily Martin 1
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works Title Plasticity and Pathology Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0vc9v8rj ISBN 9780823266135 Authors Bates, David Bassiri, Nima Publication Date 2015 Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Plasticity and Pathology Berkeley Forum in the Humanities Plasticity and Pathology On the Formation of the Neural Subject Edited by David Bates and Nima Bassiri Townsend Center for the Humanities University of California, Berkeley Fordham University Press New York Copyright © 2016 The Regents of the University of California All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publishers. The publishers have no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party Internet websites referred to in this publication and do not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate. The publishers also produce their books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Plasticity and pathology : on the formation of the neural subject / edited by David Bates and Nima Bassiri. — First edition. p. cm. — (Berkeley forum in the humanities) The essays collected here were presented at the workshop Plasticity and Pathology: History and Theory of Neural Subjects at the Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities at the University of California, Berkeley. -
Normal Jugular Bulb Oxygen Saturation a Chieregato, F Calzolari, G Trasforini, L Targa, N Latronico
784 J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry: first published as 10.1136/jnnp.74.6.784 on 1 June 2003. Downloaded from PAPER Normal jugular bulb oxygen saturation A Chieregato, F Calzolari, G Trasforini, L Targa, N Latronico ............................................................................................................................. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2003;74:784–786 See end of article for authors’ affiliations Background: Normal values of the jugular bulb oxygen saturation were obtained in 1942 and in ....................... 1963. Correct catheter positioning was not confirmed radiologically. Objectives: Correspondence to: To replicate the measurements during angiographic catheterisation of the jugular bulb. Dr A Chieregato, Via Methods: Oxygen saturation in the jugular bulb (SjO2), inferior petrosal sinus (SipsO2), and internal Boccacanale S. Stefano jugular vein was bilaterally measured in 12 patients with Cushing’s syndrome undergoing selective no. 25, 44100 Ferrara, bilateral catheterisation of the inferior petrosal sinus. In addition, data from the two old series were Italy; reanalysed for comparison. [email protected] Results: SjO2 values (44.7%) were significantly lower than in the two old series, particularly concern- Received 31 May 2002 ing the normal lower limit (54.6% and 55.0% respectively). Comparative analysis suggests that con- In revised form tamination with the extracerebral blood of the facial veins and inferior petrosal sinuses was responsible 9 October 2002 Accepted for falsely high SjO2 values in the two old series. 2 December 2002 Conclusions: The normal lower SjO2 limit is lower than previously recognised. This may have practi- ....................... cal implications for treating severe head trauma patients. onitoring of jugular bulb vascular oxygen saturation analysed for oxygen saturation with a co-oximeter (IL 482, (SjO2) is currently suggested in patients with severe CO-Oximeter, Instrumentation Laboratory, Milan, Italy). -
The Brain and the Behavioral Sciences
The Brain and the Behavioral Sciences The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Harrington, Anne. 2009. The brain and the behavioral sciences. In The Cambridge History of Science. Volume 6, The Modern Biological and Earth Sciences, ed. P. J. Bowler and J. V. Pickstone, 504-523. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Published Version doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521572019.028 Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3996839 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA P1: JYD 9780521572019c27 CUUS457/Bowler 978 0 521 57201 9 August 9, 2008 7:29 27 THE BRAIN AND THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Anne Harrington The increasing visibility and sense of intellectual opportunity associated with neuroscience in recent years have in turn stimulated a growing interest in its past. For the first time, a general reference book on the history of science has seen fit to include a review of the history of the brain and behavioral sciences as a thread to be reckoned with within the broader narrative tapestry. On the one hand, this looks like a welcome sign that a new historical subfield has “come of age.” On the other hand, when one settles down to the task of composing a “state of the art” narrative, one realizes just how much these are still early days. -
Medical Science and the Cruelty to Animals Act 1876: a Re-Examination of Anti-Vivisectionism in Provincial Britain
This is a repository copy of Medical science and the Cruelty to Animals Act 1876: A re-examination of anti-vivisectionism in provincial Britain. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/83097/ Version: Accepted Version Article: Finn, MA and Stark, JF orcid.org/0000-0002-0638-0804 (2015) Medical science and the Cruelty to Animals Act 1876: A re-examination of anti-vivisectionism in provincial Britain. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C :Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, 49. pp. 12-23. ISSN 1369-8486 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.10.007 Reuse Unless indicated otherwise, fulltext items are protected by copyright with all rights reserved. The copyright exception in section 29 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 allows the making of a single copy solely for the purpose of non-commercial research or private study within the limits of fair dealing. The publisher or other rights-holder may allow further reproduction and re-use of this version - refer to the White Rose Research Online record for this item. Where records identify the publisher as the copyright holder, users can verify any specific terms of use on the publisher’s website. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. [email protected] https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ 1 Medical Science and the Cruelty to Animals Act 1876: A Re-examination of Anti- vivisectionism in Provincial Britain Abstract The Cruelty to Animals Act 1876 was an important but ambiguous piece of legislation.